Title: English Usage
1Assessment Day 2001
English Usage or Abusage
2Grammar and Usage
- Grammar and usage overlap and are mutually
dependent, but they do not mean exactly the same
thing. - Grammar is concerned with the structure of the
language, the way it works, and it remains
constant over long periods. - Usage is a matter of language etiquette, of
conventional requirements, of a prescribed or
accepted code and is constantly changing.
Harry Shaw
Errors in English and Ways to Correct Them
3Are we living in a
- grammatically challenged society?
Whom?
Who?
Between you and me
Between you and I
4Influences on writing
- Technology
- On-line grammar tools
- Software wizards
- Political correctness
- Media
5What is correct?
- . . . correct English is that which is spoken
and written by the majority of reasonably
educated American people.
Sterling A. Leonard Author of Current English
Usage
6Better Middle-Class English?
- Better middle-class English well teach in our
schools, - And correct composition well leave to the fools
- Who are picayune, narrow, and nasty enough
- To insist that their pupils must master such
stuff. -
7How should we write?
- Do we want to sound like an expert, lecturing the
uninformed? - One can appreciate the health benefits of high
school - athletics for the players and the entertainment
value - for the fans.
- Or like an acquaintance, informally discussing
thoughts and opinions? - I think high school athletics can be healthful
for the - players and enjoyable for the fans.
Elizabeth McMahan and Robert Funk Heres How to
Write Well
8What is appropriate language?
- Use formal language when you want to downplay
your personal involvement and emphasize the
factual content of your writing. - Use an informal tone when you want your readers
to know something about your personal feelings or
attitudes.
Elizabeth McMahan and Robert Funk Heres How to
Write Well
9What rules should we enforce?
- Formal Writing
- Write in third person
- Avoid addressing the
- audience directly as you
- Use no contractions
- Use no slang
- Use no sentence fragments
- Avoid ending sentences
- with prepositions
- Informal Writing
- Write in first person
- May address the audience as
- you
- May use contractions
- Use slang only if its
- appropriate for audience
- Use occasional fragment for
- stylistic effect
Elizabeth McMahan and Robert Funk Heres How to
Write Well
10Are these really Non-Errors?
None of the students (is,/are) What were
you thinking of?
- Usages people keep telling you are wrong but
which are actually standard in English. - Split-infinitives
- Ending a sentence with a preposition
- Beginning a sentence with a conjunction
- Over versus more than
- None singular versus plural
Harry Shaw
Errors in English and Ways to Correct Them
11What Can English Instructors Do?
- If correct English is that which is spoken and
written by the majority of reasonably educated
American people . . . - If the majority of people write as they speak . .
. - If language is influenced by media and technology
. . . - If students ignore formal writing rules . . .
12What Can English Instructors Do?
No fragments!
- Should we continue to enforce formal writing
rules? - Are there certain rules that may be considered
non-errors? - What is appropriate and what is inappropriate?
- Can the English department come to consensus?
No contractions!
Third person.
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